"Roses"

"Roses"

Click the arrow on the audio player to hear Billy Collins read this poem. You can also download the recording or subscribe to Slate's Poetry Podcast on iTunes.

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In those weeks of midsummerwhen the roses in gardens begin to give up,the big red, white, and pink ones—the inner, enfolded petals growing cankerous,the ones at the edges turning brownor fallen already, down on their girlish backsin the rough beds of turned-over soil,

then how terrible the expressions on their faces,a kind of was it all really worth it? look,to die here slowly in front of everyonein the garden of a bed-and-breakfastin a provincial English market town,to expire by degrees of corruptionin plain sight of all the neighbors passing by,

the thin mail carrier, the stocky butcher(thank God the children pay no attention),the swiveling faces in the windows of the buses,and now this stranger staring over the wall,his hair disheveled, a scarf loose around his neck,writing in a notebook, writing about us no doubt,about how terrible we look under the punishing sun.

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Billy Collins's ninth collection of poems, Horoscopes for the Dead, will be published in March. He is a distinguished professor of English at Lehman College (CUNY) and a distinguished fellow of the Winter Park Institute of Rollins College.

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